UPI 27 Apr 11;
JAKARTA, April 27 (UPI) -- More than 568 million acres of forest worldwide will disappear by 2050 if no action is taken, a new WWF report warns.
The report calls on governments and businesses to unite around a goal of zero net deforestation and forest degradation, or ZNDD, by 2020 as a global benchmark to avoid dangerous climate change and reduce biodiversity losses.
"We are squandering forests now by failing to sort out vital policy issues such as governance and economic incentives to keep forests standing," said Rod Taylor, WWF International Forests director, in a statement.
The two goals of ZNDD and meeting global demand for materials and energy pose both challenges and business opportunities for the forest products sector, the "Living Forests" report notes.
"Forest products are renewable and, when sourced from well-managed natural forests and plantations, tend to have a lower footprint than alternatives like steel, concrete and plastic based on fossil sources," it states.
The loss of natural or semi-natural forest now stands at 32 million acres a year, WWF says.
Maintaining near zero forest loss in the longer term will require responses to rising pressures on forests due to demand for food, materials and fuel for a growing population, which WWF says is expected to hit 9 billion people by 2050.
WWF released a portion of the report Wednesday to coincide with the opening of the Business 4 Environment Global Summit in Jakarta, Indonesia.
"The need for a careful balance between development and environmental stewardship is increasingly obvious, as is the need to involve the private sector in attaining that balance," said Suryo Sulisto, chairman of the Indonesian Chamber of Commerce and Industry, speaking on the sidelines of the summit.
Indonesia, for its part, aims to cut emissions by 26 percent by 2020 but President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has said that with international climate aid, emissions could be reduced by 42 percent.
Resource-rich Indonesia is one of the world's largest suppliers of coal, palm oil and timber. It boasts the world's third-largest tropical forest but has the second-highest deforestation rate in the world after Brazil.
Continued deforestation and rising carbon emissions plague the country as it struggles to balance environmental preservation with economic growth that topped 6 percent last year.
Indonesia ranks as the fifth largest carbon emitter in the world, with deforestation and forest degradation accounting for more than 80 percent of its emissions.
World to lose forest area 27 times as big as Austria
Yahoo News 27 Apr 11;
VIENNA (AFP) – The world stands to lose 230 million hectares of forest by 2050 with drastic consequences for the climate, biodiversity and the global economy, the WWF wildlife campaign group said on Wednesday.
"Those responsible -- policy-makers and industry -- are sawing away at the branch we're all sitting on," WWF's head of forests, Philipp Goeltenboth, said in a statement, noting that the area projected to be lost is 27 times the size of Austria.
The current rate of deforestation is 35 football fields per minute worldwide, according to the organisation.
Its new WWF Living Forests report advocates a "Zero Net Deforestation and Forest Degradation (ZNDD)" by 2020.
ZNDD is defined as "no net forest loss through deforestation and no net decline in forest quality through degradation," WWF said.
Nevertheless, that does not mean WWF was in favour of no forest clearing anywhere, under any circumstances.
ZNDD recognised, for example, peoples' right to clear some forests for agriculture, or the value in occasionally "trading off" degraded forests "to free up other land to restore important biological corridors, provided that biodiversity values and net quantity and quality of forests are maintained."
"Achieving ZNDD will stem the depletion of forest-based biodiversity and ecosystem services, and associated greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions," it said.
Governments, business must unite in joint action to stop forest loss
WWF 27 Apr 11;
Policymakers and business leaders must quickly back a bold target to stop forest loss as part of efforts to conserve biodiversity and fight climate change, according to a new WWF report.
The first chapter of WWF’s Living Forests Report, released today, examines the drivers of deforestation and identifies the opportunities to shift from business as usual to a new model of sustainability, which can benefit government, business and communities.
Based on a new global analysis showing that more than 230 million hectares of forest will disappear by 2050 if no action is taken, the report proposes that policymakers and businesses unite around a goal of zero net deforestation and forest degradation (ZNDD) by 2020 as a groundbreaking global benchmark to avoid dangerous climate change and curb biodiversity loss.
“We are squandering forests now by failing to sort out vital policy issues such as governance and economic incentives to keep forests standing,” said Rod Taylor, WWF International Forests Director.
Business and governments need forests
The first chapter of the report comes as business and political leaders meet this week in Jakarta, Indonesia, for the Business 4 Environment Global Summit (B4E). The conference will be addressed by His Excellency Mr. Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, President of the Republic of Indonesia.
“The dual imperatives of ZNDD and meeting global demand for materials and energy pose both challenges and business opportunities for the forest products sector,” the report states. “Forest products are renewable and, when sourced from well-managed natural forests and plantations, tend to have a lower footprint than alternatives like steel, concrete and plastic based on fossil sources.”
On the first day of the conference, businesses from the forestry, mining and palm oil sectors operating on the nearby island of Borneo will meet as part of WWF’s Heart of Borneo Green Business Network.
At the summit, WWF will call on forestry companies to join the organization’s Global Forest & Trade Network, and also on other business sectors to support our goal in achieving certification of 75% of key global commodities in the region by 2020. More than 40% of the island’s forests are under concession to the private sector, with around 23% (6 million hectares) under management by the forestry industry.
Carrefour, a leading retailer in Indonesia is answering this call by endorsing WWF’s Global Forest & Trade Network (GFTN). Today, the group’s two biggest suppliers for tissue paper in Indonesia, PT Graha Kerindo Utama and PT Graha Cemerlang Paper Utama are pledging to implement sustainable business under the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC).
"Our ambition is both simple and strong: to become the preferred retailer. This can only be achieved by managing our retail business in a responsible and sustainable manner," said RM Adji Srihandoyo, the Corporate Affair Director PT CARREFOUR
Heart of Borneo – a model for collaboration
More businesses than ever before are working toward sustainable forest management, and governments are strengthening land use criteria and developing groundbreaking economic and fiscal incentives on the island, one of the most forest-rich places on the planet.
On the ground, WWF and its local partners are developing pilot projects to demonstrate the feasibility of these approaches.
“In the Heart of Borneo, tangible examples of how these systems work are emerging. WWF-Indonesia acknowledges that sustainability does not occur overnight. We call on the business sector to join with us as we make the first steps on the road to a green economy and low carbon future, not just in Borneo, but in Sumatra and Papua as well – step by step,” said Dr. Efransjah, WWF-Indonesia CEO.
Right now on the island of Borneo in a 220,000km2 area designated for conservation and sustainable development called the Heart of Borneo, these are the ideas being put into practice.
ZNDD no barrier to sustainable forest-based business
Zero net deforestation and forest degradation by 2020 means no overall loss of forest area or forest quality, so a new monoculture plantation does not offset the loss of primary natural forest. The target requires the loss of natural or semi-natural forest to be reduced to near zero, down from the current 13 million hectares a year, and held at that level indefinitely.
To understand what this would mean in practice, WWF developed the Living Forests Model with the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA), which forms the basis for the Living Forests Report.
The Living Forests Model projects that by “doing nothing” we could lose more than 230 million hectares between now and 2050.
“The Living Forests Model shows that conserving our forests is possible – and urgent. But it won’t be easy,” said Taylor.
Making a difference now and towards 2050
“Better governance and economic incentives will enable sound stewardship of forests and more productive use of already- degraded land,” Taylor said. “This would ensure enough farming land, timber plantations and well-managed forests to meet current global demand for wood and food without further forest loss.”
The report concludes that maintaining near zero forest loss in the longer term will require responses to rising pressures on forests due to demand for food, materials and fuel for a growing population, expected to hit 9 billion people by 2050.
“In the short term, halting deforestation is all about better governance,” said Taylor, “But as we get out towards 2050 and the population passes 9 billion, we will need to cut over-consumption and waste of food and energy, and boost productivity of farms and forestry to keep forest loss at near zero.”
More to come
Held in partnership with WWF, Global Initiatives and the Government of Indonesia, the B4E Summit hopes “to generate collaborative solutions to address the most urgent environmental and climate issues facing the world today.”
Additional chapters of the Living Forest Report will be released throughout the year to form a comprehensive analysis of the choices and decisions that must be made to secure a forested future for people and nature.
WWF Seeking Ambitious Curbs on Deforestation
Fidelis E. Satriastanti Jakarta Globe 28 Apr 11;
The World Wildlife Fund unveiled on Tuesday its plan for halting deforestation rates worldwide and maintaining forest cover.
The group’s goal of Zero Net Deforestation and Forest Degradation by 2020 would require the loss of natural or secondary forest to be trimmed to near zero, down from the current 13 million hectares a year worldwide, and held at that level indefinitely.
Rod Taylor, the WWF international forest director, said the Living Forests Model, developed by WWF and the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, was aimed at finding ways to attain that goal.
“The Living Forests Model projects that by ‘doing nothing,’ we could lose more than 230 million hectares between now and 2050,” he said at the launch of the ZNDD on Tuesday.
“The Living Forests Model shows that conserving our forests is possible — and urgent. But it won’t be easy.”
Taylor said that better governance and economic incentives would enable sound stewardship of forests and more productive use of already degraded land.
“This would ensure enough farming land, timber plantations and well-managed forests to meet current global demand for wood and food without further forest loss,” he said.
“In the short term, halting deforestation is all about better governance. But as we get out toward 2050 and the population passes nine billion, we will need to cut overconsumption and waste of food and energy, and boost productivity of farms and forestry to keep forest loss at near zero.”
WWF says the Living Forests Model explores various global land-use scenarios for forests. It also calculates the effect of forces such as population growth and consumer demand, and describes possible consequences on key issues such as food production, climate change, biodiversity, commodity prices and economic development.
Nazir Foead, policy director at WWF Indonesia, said the Forestry Ministry had implemented a similar model with its “land swap” program, where a development project that required the clearing or exploitation of forests would have to make up for the loss by providing a replacement forest area.
However, the program treats monoculture estates, such as oil palm plantations, as forest area. Under the ZNDD, Nazir said, this would not happen because forest quality was just as important as forest area.
He also said the ZNDD would allow for development in areas with low ecological, conservation or cultural value, rather than in primary forests or peatlands.
“Under the ZNDD, total forest area doesn’t decline because there’s always a replacement,” Nazir said.
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